Government website

Podcast

Section 7.07, no. 50, p. 210

American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. (Producer). (2009, August 25). Protecting the hearing of the young [Audio podcast]. Retrieved from http://podcast.asha.org/2009/04/06/episode-14-protecting-the-hearing-of-the-young

Blog Entry/Post

Section 7.11, no. 76, p. 215

Munger, D. (2007, September 20). The curse of knowledge: Mistaking your beliefs for those of others [Blog Post]. Retrieved from http://scienceblogs.com/cognitivedaily/2007/09/20/the-curse-of-knowledge-mistaki

Note: If the authors name is not available, use the screen name.

Notes:

For many websites there will be no person listed as the author. In those cases use the organzation name as a corporate author. Be sure to use the full name of the organization and avoid acronymns unless they are commonly understood.

If you have a full date for when the webpage was posted, use that. For example, if a webpage is for a news source and includes the day and month of publication you should include that as well, just as you would for a print newspaper source.

If there is no date use (n.d.). Hint: Look for dates in the footer at the bottom of the webpage.

After the title you should may include a document description in square brackets so the reader knows what kind of source is being cited.

Include a URL that goes directly to the webpage being cited. If the entire website is being cited use the homepage URL.